Saturday, January 31, 2009

Learn mandarin - Ruins of Yuanmingyuan Garden




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Ruins of Yuanmingyuan Garden

( 2008-07-08 )

The Ruins of the Yuanmingyuan, also known as the Garden of Perfection and Brightness, is located northwest of Beijing and to the east of the Summer Palace. The Garden was first constructed in the year of 1709 during the reign of the Emperor Kangxi of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911).

Over the next 150 years of the Qing Dynasty, this Garden was expanded to be a large-scale Chinese emperors' private pleasure garden, covering a total area of 350 hectares (over 864 acres). It was destroyed by British and French troops in the late 19th century. It is now deserted.

The Garden originally had a great lake in the middle of it, and it was surrounded by Nine Islets. Various temples and pavilions are scattered around the islets. Artisans have borrowed various sights from all over the country, including garden architecture from Suzhou, mountain scenery from
Huangshan and the temple and monastery buildings as well. So be prepared to do some walking and feast your eyes on all of this distinctive architecture.

The islets can be mainly divided into three gardens: the western section - Yuanmingyuan (the Garden of Perfection and Brightness), the southern Changchunyuan (the Garden of Eternal Spring) and the eastern Wanchunyuan (the Garden of Eternal Spring). You will find the European Garden with its Great
Fountain Ruins in Changchunyuan (the Garden of Eternal Spring). It is considered the only and best-preserved relic in the palace.

Yuanmingyuan Garden is the largest one of the three gardens boasting 48 scenic spots, which are further divided into smaller areas. Constructions inside the garden include the Zhengda Guangming Hall where emperors handled political affairs; Jiuzhou Qingyan Hall where the imperial family dined;
Anyou Palace where sacrificial ceremonies were held; Wenyuan Pavilion where books were stored; and Broken Bridge, Fallen Snow, a scenic spot imitating the style of the West Lake. Also kept in the garden is a large number of books, calligraphies and paintings, and treasures.

Hundreds of scenic spots in the Garden are made up of exquisitely constructed halls, pavilions, chambers, kiosks, earth and rock hills, rivers and ponds, and exotic flowers and grasses from different parts of the country. Indeed, it embodies the essence of Chinese ancient landscape gardening.

Emperors and empresses of the late Qing lived a luxurious life at the palace, spending money excessively. In the 10th year (1860) of Emperor Xianfeng, the English and French armies invaded Beijing and burned the palace to the ground. The remaining carved stone columns are a reminder of the crimes
committed by imperialist powers.

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* Emblem of the Beijing Olympic Cultural Festival ( 07-10 )

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Learn Chinese online - Dang Qiuqian




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Dang Qiuqian

( 2008-07-08 )

Dang Qiuqian, literally to have a swing, first originated in the northern part of China by the minority groups, and spread into Central China during the Spring and Autumn Period (770-476BC). In the Han Dynasty (206BC-220AD), swinging as a recreational activity was very popular, and became a
designated program on the Qingming Festival (Tomb-Sweeping Day) or the Duanwu Festival (Dragon Boat Festival). The participants perform acrobatics and exercises of strength and dexterity while using ropes, often quite high above the ground.

Swinging had become a popular performing art by the Song Dynasty (960-1279), when professional acrobats performed daring feats called swinging over water from swings installed on the decks of two separate pleasure boats. Music played as one acrobat climbed up and down a tall pole affixed to the
stern of one boat while another acrobat performed tricks on a swing before both finally somersaulted into the water.

The Korean and Bai ethnic groups are particularly expert in these swing activities. During the festivals they wear their fineries and decorate the swings to be as beautiful as possible. The thick ropes are tied on horizontal branches of large trees, bold and uninhibited people will then hang a
ribbon or a ring above and before the swing so that players have to swing up to reach them. The high flying, graceful and daring performers are greeted by the cheers and applause of the enthusiastic onlookers.

Swinging became a formal competition of the National Sports Meeting of Minority Groups in February, 1986. Nowadays, it has been a common plaything for children.

  Emblems More

* Dancing Beijing -- Beijing 2008 Olympic Emblem

============================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================

* Beijing Paralympics Emblem ( 07-10 )
* Environmental Emblem of Beijing 2008 ( 07-10 )
* Emblem of the Beijing Olympic Torch Relay ( 07-10 )
* Emblem of the Beijing 2008 OYC ( 07-10 )
* Emblem of the Beijing Olympic Cultural Festival ( 07-10 )

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Olympic on Beijing's Axis

  Online Tour

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Saturday, January 24, 2009

Study Chinese - “Five Nights”Kicks Off




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“Five Nights”Kicks Off

From June 23 to the end of September, the grand gala “Five Nights” will highlight Olympic cultural activities with more than a thousand of arts from over 100 countries of five continents perform wonderful dances and songs.

The first show of “Five Nights”—— Arab Night

Original literature classics of Arab,

Widespread Arab Dances,

Profound Arabic Culture,

Melodious Arab music,

Lively features…

Once Arab is mentioned, it always sparks imaginations: boundless deserts, traveling camel caravans, the men in white gowns, the girls who wear veils exposing brilliant black eyes… also the famous symphony of Russian composer Borodin—— In the Steppes of Central Asia, Rimsky-Korsakov’s
symphony One Thousand and One Nights, the famous American movie Lawrence of Arabia, the famous Egyptian movie La Dolce vita and the Doobie Dance which is popular around the world…

Based on the principle of studying one another, seeking common points while reserving differences and respecting world diversity, more than 1,000 artists will come to Beijing and bring five performances of song and dance with different customs—— Asia Night, Africa Night, Latin America Night,
Arab Night and SCO (Shanghai Cooperation Organization) Night from June, 23 to September. The splendid “Five Nights” will review and prospect the accord development of the world culture from different aspect, continue transferring the good wish of “one world one dream” for the Beijing
Olympic Games in 2008. “Five Nights” will lead major Olympic cultural events to a spurting climax and display the grand art works that come from different countries and regions. Everybody will enjoy the peace and harmony of the world!

Both Arab and China are in the east of the world. Many art groups come from Arabian countries come together to Beijing and present song and dance with strong Arabic customs and make the performance to be an audiovisual feast—— “Arab Night” in this passionate summer night.

The “Arab Night” this year will emphasize the subject—— China and Arab cultural communication, and on the other hand it will be different from former years. We will provide a new style opening performance different from the performance in former years that combined formal dance and
voiceovers.

SCO (Shanghai cooperative Organization) Night—A Gathering of Nostalgic Songs

Enriched with Russian and central Asian flavor, this special concert should never be missed by the audiences who love the classical soviet songs. Directed by Ge Xiaohong, the director of CCTV, the concert will be performed by China National Symphony Orchestra and artists from the five countries of
SCO will adopt chorus, semichorus, solo and accordion as their performing forms to play such classical songs as Moscow Nights, Song of the volga boat men and Katyusha.

Time: July 18 to 19

Venue: National Centre for the Performing Arts

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Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Chinese Tutor - Send in the Clowns




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Send in the Clowns

Big shoes, a white-painted face and large round red nose -- such is the stuff that clowns are made of. And when International Children's Day falls on Sunday, an international festival at the Poly Theater in Beijing promises to treat youngsters to the entertainers and their humor.

More than 20 professional clowns from France, Sweden, Poland, Russia, Moldova, Ukraine and Lithuania will perform for children and adults in a program featuring fantastic costumes and a magic show.

Children from St. Petersburg Children Ballet will also present the romantic Sleeping Beauty during this weekend at the Mei Lanfang Grand Theater. For 20 years, the St. Petersburg Children Ballet has cultivated new blood and inherited the beauty of ballet from the Russian ballet. Youngsters in the
Children Ballet are all from well-known Russian ballet schools.

The China National Children's Art Theater and Dougeza Theater of Japan will give a joint performance of the children's drama, Fire Engine and Little Jeep, in Beijing at the China Children's Art Theater.

The children's play is inspired by the popular Japanese TV show Kasou Taishou. It made its debut in Beijing in May and Japan in June, 2007.

In the first part of the show, three performers will use fruits and other everyday items to depict animals, while in the second part, a story of a fire engine will be performed by using Kasou Taishou-style tricks.

For tickets, call China Ticket Online: 6417-7845.

By Chen Nan

Editor:Wang Nan

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Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Learn Chinese online - Bending over Backwards




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Bending over Backwards

The audience at the Chaoyang Theater was restless at a recent performance. When the lights finally dimmed, there was a shriek of joy.

A new acrobatic show called Flying Acrobatics by the Deyang Acrobatics Troupe from Sichuan province, Southwest China, is something special. All 59 performers have graduated from the Acrobatic Training School, where students begin training at age 5. The troupe has won wide acclaim and has toured
more than 40 countries and regions.

Acrobatic performers from Sichuan province will stun Beijing audiences with their amazing skills.

It's not often you can see a man balancing upside down on one hand atop a half-dozen chairs stacked frighteningly close to the edge of the stage, or watch a girl contorting her body into leg-splitting poses, holding candelabras on her hands and feet.

Directed by Li Longyin, with choreography and costumes by Shaga Ayi and Wen Ge, the one-hour show begins with a mysterious sacrificial ceremony. Birds symbolizing freedom hover in the sky and a tribal king walks slowly to the center of the stage. As the light catches the glint of pointed,
gold-encased fingertips, the row of bodies is transformed into a wave.

The high-energy dances and acrobatics, enhanced with dramatic lighting and spectacular costumes, pay tribute to the history and culture of the Sichuan people. Folk melodies were played and a number of beautiful traditional handicrafts such as porcelain, dragons and lions were used as stage props.

"Sichuan is rich in natural and cultural legacies. Absorbing the spirits of the sun, the sky and the earth, the place is marvelous," says Li Longyin.

Li had planned to travel around Sichuan before producer Zhou Xiaoheng, who leads the Deyang Acrobatics Troupe, persuaded him to join the show.

Li says that the color gold, which features so prominently in the production, is a reference to Sanxingdui, a prehistoric site near Chengdu, capital of Sichuan.

In 1929, a farmer found a piece of jade while digging a ditch. That was the first clue leading to the discovery of an ancient kingdom, which once lasted some 1,500 years but disappeared mysteriously about 5,000 years ago.

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Monday, January 12, 2009

Chinese Class - The Arts Works from Foreign Embassies Exhibition




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The Arts Works from Foreign Embassies Exhibition

One World, One Home, the third exhibition of the Art Works from Foreign Embassies series, will run from April 10 to 23 at the Capital Museum.

Hand-embroidered covers and paintings depicting daily life in Africa are displayed at the third Exhibition of Artworks from Foreign Embassies on Thursday, April 10, 2008.

Toys from Colombia, painstakingly crafted to show the vivid facial expressions of the Colombian people, are also on display.

An Indian cabinet is among the exhibits at the third Exhibition of Artworks from Foreign Embassies on Thursday, April 10, 2008.

More than 300 pieces including paintings, sculptures and handicrafts, have been gathered from more than 60 embassies in China to display the strong points of their respective nations.

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Sunday, January 11, 2009

Learn mandarin - Forty and Fabulous




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Forty and Fabulous

Celine Dion hits China as part of her world tour.

She loomed from backstage without much fanfare. The audience hardly recognized her until a few seconds later when her image was projected onto the giant screen right above her where she made her entrance. But when she belted out her first note, it was distinctly Celine. The audience burst into
thunderous applause. Such was the magic of Celine Dion.

The 15,000-seat Venetian Arena was packed with both expats and local Chinese, many taking their teenage children along. Macao was the first Chinese city of Dion's Taking Chances World Tour, which will take her further to Shanghai and Beijing coming April.

The Canadian songstress, who turns 40 this Sunday, acknowledged her audience by greeting and showing appreciation in simple Mandarin.

At the end of the show, when she posed with reporters from Beijing, she wished Beijing "a successful Olympic Games".

This is a diva who does not act imperious. Her down-to-earth personality came through in the brief post-concert meeting. She shook hands with everyone and made small talk.

This after a grueling 1.5-hour show, during which she crooned, warbled and blasted out a total of 23 songs.

On stage, her presence was electrifying. There was no slack in her performance. She threw herself into every song and every note. Except for a few breaks for costume changes, filled in by dancers, she was on stage the entire time, singing her heart out.

The first half of the program was made up of her biggest hits, such as The Power of Love and Because You Loved Me, as well as the title song from her new album Taking Chances.

The power of her voice was evident. Soaring high notes and sultry low ones were delivered with precision and infused with emotion. The biggest surprise was her unique combination of vocal prowess and emotional abandon. She did not hold in, and that enabled her to pull her audience right into the
world of her music.

The second half demonstrated her immense range of vocal styles: mostly rock and soul, with a few Latin and one French hit Pour Que Tu M'aimes Encore interspersed into the mix. Her rendition of We Will Rock You encouraged the mild-mannered audience to stand and clap.

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Saturday, January 10, 2009

Chinese Class - Introduction in Different Languages




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Exchange>Exhibition

Introduction in Different Languages

Download:

Chinese, English

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Thursday, January 8, 2009

Learning Mandarin - Valentine's Day, all you need is Love




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Chinese Way>Life

Valentine's Day, all you need is Love

It’s not just the other person you are playing with; it's the relationship you have built with your beloved Renovate together.

When we say 'temporary' job, we don't mean it. To find a job is really difficult today, even if it's a temporary one. Therefore, why not just stay inside on the Valentine's Day and do something your romantic haven. You can even make it more romantic.

The home is a big project, even installing new curtains or replacing your ratty sheets count as improvements, so put your heads together.

Maybe your bedroom is in good shape, but that bathroom has seen better days. Updating an aging bathroom can be as easy as changing a faucet or installing a new shower head, so don't be afraid of change.Nurturing the home you live in simultaneously nurtures your relationship. So, invest in your
nest and you will see many positive returns.

Start lover’s blog

Words fly away, but writing remains. Though you do not normally write words down, you can still start a blog for your lover. Tell him or her you have already started your first diary about your love. Use your first dating date as the password, or use his or her name as the blog title. This does
not make you are a corny romantic. Your sweetheart will be moved to tears.

Secret album

You must have a cell phone with a camera, right Take some of your lover’s photos without his or her knowledge. When he or she is talking, laughing, shedding tear, or cooking. Print them out, and then make them into an album. Then give it to her on this special day, nd say, “You are the only
person I care about in this world.

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Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Chinese language - Painting on Silk




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Created in China>Art Treasures>Chinese Crafts and Fine Arts>Chinese Painting>list

Painting on Silk

In 1949 a painting on white silk was unearthed in a tomb of the Chu Kingdom nearChangshainHunan Province. This Human,Dragon and PhoenixPaintingis the earliest traditionalChinese paintingfound so far.

Dragonand Phoenix Painting

The painting was executed about 2,300 years ago on a piece of white silk used as a banner in traditional Chinese funerals. Although it is blotched and indistinct now, the outlines are still eligible. It is the profile of a woman dressed in a garment with full sleeves and a long skirt. She has her
palms together, as if praying. On top of her head is a flying phoenix with its tail curving upward. On her right side is a twisting dragon rising to the sky. One foot of the dragon has been stripped off. Some people have suggested the woman in the picture was a portrayal of the one buried in the
tomb, and the phoenix and dragon are leading her up to heaven. Others say that the woman is a witch praying for the dead in the tomb, with the phoenix and dragon as her guides. Some experts consider the fighting between the phoenix and dragon a struggle between good and evil, and the woman is
praying for good to conquer evil. Clearly, the real meaning of the painting has not yet been deciphered.

The painting is done with smooth and strong strokes. Some parts are filled with ink washes, some painted with colors. The forms of the woman, phoenix and the dragon are all of decorative beauty. Although there is no background in the picture, its rich and moving content makes it a complete
painting.

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Monday, January 5, 2009

Chinese School - Treasured Knowledge of Obstetrics




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Created in China>Traditional Chinese Medicine >Books

Treasured Knowledge of Obstetrics

Jing Xiao Chan Bao(Treasured Knowledge of Obstetrics), also calledChan Bao, was compiled between 847 and 852.

The book is the earliest monographic work on obstetrics available inChina. The author collected obstetrics theories of many scientists before the Tang Dynasty (618-907), and compiledt many folk recipes and his personal clinical experiences in the book.

Chan Baois in 3 volumes, containing 52 chapters and 371 prescriptions. The first volume expounds fetus nourishing, fetus protection, miscarriage prevention, food prohibited, hyperemesis gravidarum, threatened abortion, hemorrhage, abdominal distention, and many other symptoms of dystocia. It
especially gives a detailed introduction to cross birth and footling presentation. The second and third volumes contain 25 chapters altogether, discussing the treatment of all kinds of obstetrical diseases, with some prescriptions attached.

The book offers a detailed discussion on symptoms of gestation, parturition, and post partum. For each type of disease, theoretic discussion comes first, and then come the prescriptions; In therapy, stress is put on conditioning of "qi"(vital energy) and blood,and invigoration of spleen and
kidney. It introduces a simple and straightforward way for emergency treatment of swooning off due to excessive loss of blood during delivery.

The book preserved the experience and prescriptions in obstetrical treatment before the Tang Dynasty (618-907), set the rules in obstetrics and gynecology for later generations, and contributed a great deal to the development of this branch of science inChina.

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Sunday, January 4, 2009

Learning Mandarin - Chunyu Yi




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Created in China>Traditional Chinese Medicine >Doctors

Chunyu Yi

Chunyu Yi was from Linzi in the Western Han Dynasty (206BC-8AD). He was born in 205BC, but the year of his death is unknown. As he once worked as a Taicang Zhang (an official in charge of tax and salary), he also had the honorary title of "Taicang Gong" (Sir. Taicang), simply as "Cang Gong".

He was modest and studious, especially good at creative reading of books and flexible treatment of diseases. Chunyu Yi was born into a poor family. As a child, he liked to read medical books and could treat some cases. Then, he learned from the famous doctor Gongsun Guang in Zichuan. Gongsun Guang
liked his modesty and studiousness very much, so he thought highly of Chunyu Yi and taught Chunyu Yi all his miraculous prescriptions without any reserve. Soon after,Gongsun Guang found that he had nothing to teach Chunyu Yi, and he predicted that Chunyu Yi would become a national level famous
doctor for sure. In order to help him receive further education,Gongsun Guang recommended that he should take Gongsun Yangqing, an elder brother of Gongsun Guang, as his teacher. Gongsun Yangqing was already in his 70s at that time. He also appreciated Chunyu Yi's modesty and desire to learn
knowledge, so he explained all the secret books and ancient prescriptions he had collected to Chunyu Yi in detail. In the second year after finishing his apprenticeship, Chunyu Yi began to practice medicine; and three years later,he became a famous doctor. Chunyu Yi swotted at classical medical
books,and could recite them at random,but when he treated his patients, he would practice according to the actual condition, and never apply the book knowledge mechanically.

A doctor of the king of the Qi Kingdom called Sui was ill, and took the Wushi San (Powder of Five Stones) prepared by himself, but his illness was getting worse, so he turned to Chunyu Yi for help. After careful feeling of his pulse, Chunyu Yi said, "The disease you got is internal fever, and drug
stone is a strong medicine, so you'll suffer dysuria, which deteriorates your disease. Please never take it again." Sui did not agree, and snapped back with an example, "Bianque said,a Yin stone (a stone of negative nature) will cure a disease of the positive nature while a Yang stone (a stone of
the masculine and positive nature) will cure a disease of the negative nature. Chunyu Yi said with a smile, "What you said may be plausible. Although Bianque said so,in treatment of a disease, you must make careful study on the condition of the illness in combination with medical theory and
therapy, and choose medicines according to the patient's physique and state of illness, then you can get an ideal effect. And he predicted, if Sui stuck to his way, a carbuncle would grow in his body soon. Sure enough,about a hundred days later, Sui got a carbuncle on his breast, and died. That
example shows Chunyu Yi's style characterized by creative reading of books and flexible treatment of diseases.

Establishing Case Record to Develop Medical Science

Zhenji (record of medical treatment) is what we call "case record" today. Taking case record is an ordinary matter in today's medical treatment, and is a basic requirement for a qualified doctor. But the establishment of the case record was no easy matter at all. Zhao, emperor of the Qi Kingdom,
asked Chunyu Yi, "You have effectively cured many patients. Where were your patients from?What diseases did they have?After taking your medicines, what kind of change took place in their state of illness?" Chunyu Yi answered the questions one by one. He had taken down such information as the
patients' native places, names, occupations, disease names, pathogenic factors, nature of disease, diagnosis, therapies and prognoses,etc., thus forming the earliest case record and leaving precious historic data for today's research on the medical science in the Han Dynasty.

Chunyu Yi's case record covers both the nobles and the ordinary people. In the chapter "Biography of Cang Sir" of the book Shiji (the Records of the Historian), there are 25 cases of illness recorded, among which 15 were cured, 10 were not cured, which covered many categories of modern medicine
such as digestion, urination, respiration, cardiovascular diseases, internal secretion, blood vessel of the brain, infectious diseases, surgery, poisoning, obstetrics and gynecology, and pediatrics. There is such a story in his case record: When Huang Changqing of the Qi Kingdom feted his guests,
Chunyu Yi was among them, too. When he saw Song Jian, the younger brother of the Queen, he told him anxiously, "You have been ill for four or five days. You have a pain in your waist so that you cannot bend forward or backward, and you have dysuria, too. You must try to cure it while it has not
spread to your internal organs. It is called 'kidney trouble'." Song Jian said, "Really so." He took the "soft soap" prepared by Chunyu Yi, and recovered completely in just 18 days. Such a diseChunyu Yi was from Linzi in the Western Han Dynasty (206BC-8AD). He was born in 205BC, but the year of
his death is unknown. As he once worked as a Taicang Zhang (an official in charge of tax and salary), he also had the honorary title of "Taicang Gong" (Sir. Taicang), simply as "Cang Gong".

He was modest and studious, especially good at creative reading of books and flexible treatment of diseases. Chunyu Yi was born into a poor family. As a child, he liked to read medical books and could treat some cases. Then, he learned from the famous doctor Gongsun Guang in Zichuan. Gongsun Guang
liked his modesty and studiousness very much, so he thought highly of Chunyu Yi and taught Chunyu Yi all his miraculous prescriptions without any reserve. Soon after,Gongsun Guang found that he had nothing to teach Chunyu Yi, and he predicted that Chunyu Yi would become a national level famous
doctor for sure. In order to help him receive further education,Gongsun Guang recommended that he should take Gongsun Yangqing, an elder brother of Gongsun Guang, as his teacher. Gongsun Yangqing was already in his 70s at that time. He also appreciated Chunyu Yi's modesty and desire to learn
knowledge, so he explained all the secret books and ancient prescriptions he had collected to Chunyu Yi in detail. In the second year after finishing his apprenticeship, Chunyu Yi began to practice medicine; and three years later,he became a famous doctor. Chunyu Yi swotted at classical medical
books,and could recite them at random,but when he treated his patients, he would practice according to the actual condition, and never apply the book knowledge mechanically.

A doctor of the king of the Qi Kingdom called Sui was ill, and took the Wushi San (Powder of Five Stones) prepared by himself, but his illness was getting worse, so he turned to Chunyu Yi for help. After careful feeling of his pulse, Chunyu Yi said, "The disease you got is internal fever, and drug
stone is a strong medicine, so you'll suffer dysuria, which deteriorates your disease. Please never take it again." Sui did not agree, and snapped back with an example, "Bianque said,a Yin stone (a stone of negative nature) will cure a disease of the positive nature while a Yang stone (a stone of
the masculine and positive nature) will cure a disease of the negative nature. Chunyu Yi said with a smile, "What you said may be plausible. Although Bianque said so,in treatment of a disease, you must make careful study on the condition of the illness in combination with medical theory and
therapy, and choose medicines according to the patient's physique and state of illness, then you can get an ideal effect. And he predicted, if Sui stuck to his way, a carbuncle would grow in his body soon. Sure enough,about a hundred days later, Sui got a carbuncle on his breast, and died. That
example shows Chunyu Yi's style characterized by creative reading of books and flexible treatment of diseases.

Establishing Case Record to Develop Medical Science

Zhenji (record of medical treatment) is what we call "case record" today. Taking case record is an ordinary matter in today's medical treatment, and is a basic requirement for a qualified doctor. But the establishment of the case record was no easy matter at all. Zhao, emperor of the Qi Kingdom,
asked Chunyu Yi, "You have effectively cured many patients. Where were your patients from?What diseases did they have?After taking your medicines, what kind of change took place in their state of illness?" Chunyu Yi answered the questions one by one. He had taken down such information as the
patients' native places, names, occupations, disease names, pathogenic factors, nature of disease, diagnosis, therapies and prognoses,etc., thus forming the earliest case record and leaving precious historic data for today's research on the medical science in the Han Dynasty.

Chunyu Yi's case record covers both the nobles and the ordinary people. In the chapter "Biography of Cang Sir" of the book Shiji (the Records of the Historian), there are 25 cases of illness recorded, among which 15 were cured, 10 were not cured, which covered many categories of modern medicine
such as digestion, urination, respiration, cardiovascular diseases, internal secretion, blood vessel of the brain, infectious diseases, surgery, poisoning, obstetrics and gynecology, and pediatrics. There is such a story in his case record: When Huang Changqing of the Qi Kingdom feted his guests,
Chunyu Yi was among them, too. When he saw Song Jian, the younger brother of the Queen, he told him anxiously, "You have been ill for four or five days. You have a pain in your waist so that you cannot bend forward or backward, and you have dysuria, too. You must try to cure it while it has not
spread to your internal organs. It is called 'kidney trouble'." Song Jian said, "Really so." He took the "soft soap" prepared by Chunyu Yi, and recovered completely in just 18 days. Such a disease was similar to the acute waist tissue damage in modern medical term. Another story has it that the
King of the Qi Kingdom asked Chunyu Yi to treat his handmaidens. When it was the turn for a maiden called Shu, she claimed to be in good health. Chunyu Yi told her header in a low voice, "Shu's hair color and pulse show no weak signs, but her illness has affected her spleen and stomach,so don't
let her overwork. When spring comes,she might die of hematemesis." When spring came,Shu tumbled down in the toilet and died of hematemesis. The disease was perhaps something like the hematopathy in modern term. Chunyu Yi's case record not only reflected his comprehensive high medical skills, but
also has left us the early records of various diseases, with a great significance for research.

In accordance with the actual condition of the illness, Chunyu Yi not only used medication, but also applied all kinds of physical therapies, and acupuncture and moxibustion. When the head of Zichuan was ill, Chunyu Yi went to treat him. It turned out to be a disease caused by cold when he went to
sleep without waiting for the washed hair to dry, whose symptoms included headache, fever, vexation,etc., just like the common cold in modern term. Chunyu Yi applied ice water on his forehead to help reduce the temperature, and used acupuncture at his lidui, xiangu, and fenglong points along his
Yangming channel so as to scatter his fever on the surface of his muscles. Zichuan recovered at once. Physically reducing the temperature,that is, applying an ice sack or a cold towel onto the forehead, or rubbing the body with alcohol, is a common method to lower the temperature used in modern
time. But in the Han Dynasty, more than two thousands years ago, it was a great invention indeed.

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Saturday, January 3, 2009

Chinese Speaking - Exhibition: One Thousand Years of Jingdezhen Porcelain




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Exhibition: One Thousand Years of Jingdezhen Porcelain

For centuries, Jingdezhen City has been considered China's most important center for porcelain production. Ceramics were produced here as far back as the Han dynasty (206-220BC). The imperial porcelain was so exquisite it was described as being "as white as jade, as bright as a mirror, as thin as
paper, with a sound as clear as a bell".

Co-organized by Jingdezhen Culture Bureau and Jingdezhen Ceramic Museum, the exhibition One Thousand Years of Jingdezhen Porcelain offers 123 exquisite examples of Jingdezhen porcelain, dating from the Song, Yuan, Ming, and Qing dynasties to pre-war and modern China. Included are eighty national
treasures, including nine Class One cultural items, sixty-six Class Two cultural items, and five Class Three cultural items. Also included are forty-three modern and contemporary pieces. The exhibition spans a period of over 1000 years.

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Learn mandarin - Exhibition: One Thousand Years of Jingdezhen Porcelain














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Exhibition: One Thousand Years of Jingdezhen Porcelain




In 2004, the exhibition toured to Japan as to celebrate the 1000 year anniversary of Jingdezhen. The exhibition was launched in Tokyo during Chinese New Year. More than 20,000 people visited the exhibition in 7 days. Then it toured to other cities including Osaka, Sapporo, and more. ‘It is a
miracle that an ancient industry still enjoys such vitality after a thousand years!’ commented Hirayama Ikuo, Head of the Sino-Japan Friendship Association.

















Jingdezhen Porcelain

For over 2,000 years, Jingdezhen was known as the Porcelain Capital of the world. Originally known as Xinpin, its name was changed when Emperor Jingde (1004-1007) of the Southern Song dynasty, decreed all the pieces made for court to be marked 'made in the Jingde period’.

















The porcelain industry experienced further development at Jingdezhen during the Ming and Qing dynasties, when skills were perfected and quality refined; government kilns were set up to cater exclusively to the need of the imperial house.





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Thursday, January 1, 2009

Speak Chinese - Chinese Lesson




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Guide to Chinese
Living in China


Showing results 1 to 6 of 6
Search took 0.01 seconds; generated 3 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: woliveri

Forum: Adsotrans.com Forum 8th July 2007, 12:02 PM

Replies: 19

Downloadable dictionary file?

Views: 2,160

Posted By woliveri


Re: Downloadable dictionary file?

wulong,


Yes, I have Winzip but it fails to open the archive saying it's corrupt or other error.

I'm using SQLite Maestro to view the tables (see the above graphic in my previous post), Seems...



Forum: Adsotrans.com Forum 8th July 2007, 11:11 AM

Replies: 19

Downloadable dictionary file?

Views: 2,160

Posted By woliveri


Re: Downloadable dictionary file?

Hi Trevelyan,

Thanks for the reply. It seems expanded_unified contains Chinese and Pinyin but no English.

This is the query:
http://members.bigvalley.net/wuji/china/sqlite.jpg

Questions:
1....



Forum: Adsotrans.com Forum 7th July 2007, 09:39 PM

Replies: 19

Downloadable dictionary file?

Views: 2,160

Posted By woliveri


Re: Downloadable dictionary file?

Thanks Wulong,

I have two problems.

1. Excel cannot open the entire and so I sucked it into Access and because the delimiters ( | )
don't seem to be consistant so I have pinyin together with...



Forum: Adsotrans.com Forum 7th July 2007, 12:42 AM

Replies: 19

Downloadable dictionary file?

Views: 2,160

Posted By woliveri


Re: Downloadable dictionary file?

Let me also say why I'm using NJStar (as you may be wondering).....

I like the dictionary feature where I can hover over a word and get the definition and pinyin.

But also, I can get it to write it...



Forum: Adsotrans.com Forum 7th July 2007, 12:34 AM

Replies: 19

Downloadable dictionary file?

Views: 2,160

Posted By woliveri


Re: Downloadable dictionary file?

Hey trevelyan,

I became frustrated earlier today by the limitations of NJStar's database so it sent me on a
search to add more entries into this application.

Seems the Adsotate db is one of the...



Forum: Adsotrans.com Forum 6th July 2007, 10:42 PM

Replies: 19

Downloadable dictionary file?

Views: 2,160

Posted By woliveri


Re: Downloadable dictionary file?

wulong, or anybody,

do you know how to get the data only out of the db file in a certain column order...

I'm not famliar with sqlite.. the only command I could find to extract the info is .dump...



Showing results 1 to 6 of 6





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